Good question.
There are Snellens that have pictures. By these means
an estimate of visual acuity can be obtained.
I would bet that if this two-year old were the
daughter of some of these ODs -- they
would do a lot more checking before
they put their child into a -10 diopter lens.
In fact I do believe that some children have
an adverse reaction to these drugs, that
"freeze" the accommodation at the
maximum "near" position of -10 diopters.
But let us say that some second-opinion
optometrists would suggest "holding off"
on plunging a child that age
into a -10 diopter lens.
Second-opinions vary on this subject.
Otis
Salmon Egg wrote:
On 12/29/06 7:41 AM, in article
1167406898.484719.25500@i12g2000cwa.googlegroups.com, "otisbrown@pa.net"
otisbrown@pa.net> wrote:
For instance, one 2 year-old had a Snellen of
20/60 -- which is functional for a child of that age -- and
a retinoscope/cycloplegic of -11 diopters.
How can you even rely upon a 2 year-old to read a Snellen chart correctly?
Bill
-- Fermez le Bush